Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | HD 62.4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5074484 |
Includes bibliographical references.
Introduction to part I: Booz & Co./strategy + business eminent scholar in international management 2011 -- Multinational corporations and develoment: friends for foes? -- The impact of a scholar's career: more than just the usual numbers for Jagdish Bhagwati -- Under-appreciated externalities of multinationals on host countries -- Introduction to part II: institutional theory in international business and management -- An extended view of institutional domains and implications for the multinational enterprise -- Towards a theoretical framework for examining societal-level institutional change -- Advantages of foreignness: benefits of creative institutional deviance -- The liability of home: institutional friction and firm disadvantage abroad -- Entry mode and institutional learning: a polycentric perspective -- Emerging-market multinational corporations as agents of globalization:conflicting institutional demands and the isomorphism of global markets -- Entry mode decisions by emerging-market firms investing in developed markets -- Institutional field for outward foreign direct investment: a theoretical extension? -- Institutional variance, managerial orientations and the commercial performance of Chinese enterprises -- Influence of knowledge resources on exploratory and exploitative international strategic alliances: effects of the institutional environment -- The dynamic societal cultural milieu of organziations: origins, maintenance and chnage -- International subsidiary management and environmental constraints: the case for indigenization -- Understanding institutional plurality in mulitnational enerprises: the roles of institutional logic and social indentification -- Empirical studies on legitimation strategies: a case for international business research extension.
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